2013 UC Compliance & Audit Symposium Matt Hicks, Systemwide Audit Director (Moderator) Rowena R. Manlapaz, Senior Counsel, UC Office of the General Counsel Ellen R. Auriti, Senior Counsel, UC Office of the General Counsel Bryna Bock, Director of Human Resources, UCEAP (North Session) Deborah Pichla, International HR Principal Analyst, UCEAP(South Session) 1 2 Introduction Objective: outline key considerations in establishing and maintaining international activities Caveat: application i of issues may vary, depending di on type and extent of activity, and laws and practices of foreign jurisdiction No discussion of labor/employment, accounting, audit issues 3 1
Due Diligence Prospective partner, principals, affiliates References Background check Financial due diligence Corruption: may shape due diligence, controls Restrictions Embargoes, sanctions programs, anti boycott laws Specially Designated Nationals list License requirements under export laws Other laws USA Patriot Act, laws issued by Departments of State, Commerce and Treasury 4 Corporate Form Will UC directly engage in the activity, or form an entity under local law? UC has few foreign (and domestic) entities ii Africa: Tanzania Asia: Hong Kong, Singapore Europe: UK, France North America: Mexico 5 Tax Considerations Tax status Taxable in foreign jurisdiction? Is tax exempt status available? Financial i impact to the University i Tax implications of the corporate form, activity, fund flow e.g., income, sales, VAT, property, payroll Impact on business plan Tax issues affecting expats 6 2
Governance/Management Corporate formalities: books, records, meetings Day to day operations Power of attorney Scope Controls re transfer of property, debt 7 Cash Management Funds to and from the US Process for sending funds Taxes on inbound or outbound funds Registration i of inbound funds; process; timing i Process and timing for repatriating funds Currency: USD or local? Process for obtaining local currency Costs of converting currency Currency fluctuations 8 Local Office Acquire or lease? Who will hold title? Costs of building out space: office vs. research Compliance Local building codes UC policies (e.g., seismic) Management of facilities Personal property: purchase or lease? 9 3
Other Issues Retention of service providers (counsel, accountants, tax preparers, auditors, payroll) IP matters: registration of trademarks? US laws: FCPA Other local laws: freedom of expression, personal data Dispute resolution: court or arbitration, venue Exit: what happens to UC assets? 10 UC Policies Approval of Activity Foreign Entities Participations generally require Regental approval under Standing Order 100.4(oo) 2002: Regents authorized President to approve certain foreign entities 2005: Administrative Guidelines; Provost approval Nonprofit, UC employee as CEO, majority of board UC employees, assets dedicated to UC Foreign Operations 2005 Guidelines: Provost approval Requires compliance with parameters in Guidelines Sponsor responsible for ensuring controls and processes 11 12 4
Ethical Oversight, Protections Human Subject Research Review by both US IRB and local ethical review board (local context) Obtaining consent in international settings Communication, regulatory, cultural differences, vulnerable populations US law (HHS, FDA); Local laws (e.g., credentialing requirements for healthcare professionals; regulation of investigational drugs and clinical practice); International Guidelines (e.g., Declaration of Helsinki) Data Privacy US laws (e.g., HIPAA healthcare, FERPA students); Local laws (e.g., EU Data Protection Privacy Directive very broad) Vertebrate Animal Research 13 Export Control Laws International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). Defense items. State Dept. Export Administration Regulations (EAR). Dual Use items. Commerce Dept. Will the activity involve: (1) Transfer of controlled materials/items (e.g., certain computers, cameras, biological materials, technical/medical/scientific equipment) abroad? (2) Transferring technical info about controlled items to a foreign person? (3) Providing a defense service? If yes, and if no exclusion/exception applies, license may be needed. Laptops; mobile phones; May qualify for Temporary Export Tools of Trade or Baggage license exception under EAR Consider whether it is feasible/desirable to acquire certain equipment abroad rather than exporting it from U.S. 14 Economic Sanctions and Embargoes OFAC (Treasury Dept.) Country specific sanctions programs See: http://www.treasury.gov/resourcecenter/sanctions/programs/pages/programs.aspx Cuba, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria; Somalia; Balkans; Burma; Belarus; Ivory Coast; Democratic Republic of Congo; Lebanon; Liberia; Libya; Yemen; Zimbabwe License may be needed for travel; financial transactions; provision of services. 15 5
Economic Sanctions and Embargoes US Anti Boycott laws (Commerce Dept.) Primarily re: Arab League s economic boycott of Israel. See: http://www.bis.doc.gov/complianceandenforcement/antiboycottcompliance.htm U.S. institutions may not agree to: Refuse to do business with Israel or companies blacklisted under foreign boycott agreement; Provide information about business relationships with Israel Discriminate or provide info about race, religion, sex or national origin of another person Must report requests to comply with unsanctioned boycott; and re: operations in boycotting country (Tax Reform Act) 16 Anti Terrorism and Anti Corruption U.S. Anti terrorism Laws (prohibit providing material support to terrorists). E.g., PATRIOT Act; Exec. Order 13224 Screen against government lists (e.g., Specially Designated Nationals; Foreign Terrorist Organizations; BIS lists) Tools: Subscription databases like Visual Compliance (check with campus SPO and/or compliance offices) Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Bans payments to foreign officials (broadly defined may include employees of state owned or publicly controlled universities/entities) to improperly influence them in order to obtain business benefit See: http://www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/ Foreign Jurisdiction Anti Bribery Laws (e.g., U.K. Bribery Act of 2010) 17 Obtaining Samples/Specimens Ownership of specimens Return of Research Results/Benefits of Research Local Rules (e.g., Kenya requires permits to take biological i l samples in/out of country) Developing Countries Licensing Considerations UC Licensing Guidelines urge consideration of patenting and licensing strategies that promote access to essential and agricultural innovations in developing countries (not only an issue in research conducted abroad) 18 6
Compliance with U.S. Federal Grant Requirements (If Applicable) OMB Circular A 21: Cost principles: cost accounting, unallowable costs (e.g., some sponsors consider foreign VAT taxes to be unallowable charges; currency exchange losses as unallowable) Flowdown of terms to foreign subawardees Subrecipient monitoring/oversight by U.S. prime awardee Other sponsor restrictions e.g., human/sex trafficking (USAID); international air travel 19 Other Considerations Political considerations Research personnel Housing; transportation; liability; taxes; health insurance; visas; licensing requirements; e e employment/labor issues; safety (register with UC TRIPS insure life, travel, kidnap, evacuation) Facilities leasing, liability, insurance Finance, accounting, controls Intellectual Property (Foreign jurisdictions may have different rules pertaining to patents and copyright) 20 Other Considerations Important roles for multiple institutional offices Offices of Research; Research Compliance; Sponsored Programs (Contracts & Grants); Technology Transfer; Risk Management; Counsel 21 7
22 Considerations of Employment Abroad Every country has its own rules and regulations, don t assume U.S. rules and concepts apply UC policies i and procedures may not always align with ih host country employment rules and regulations Conduct due diligence up front 23 Foreign Assignees Immigration Visa Requirements Length of stay Type of work Work Permits Generally required to work compliantly in another country irrespective of the anticipated stay Local Sponsor Foreign expert status 24 8
Foreign Assignees Taxes Income Tax U.S. host country income tax conventions Exemptions for professors / teaching experts Relief from double taxation 183 day rule Income tax exemption if certain conditions are met Variations in how the 183 days is calculated Rule is based on residence in country not duration of assignment 25 Foreign Assignees Taxes Social Security Tax Local Exemptions Totalization Agreements Oh Other possible local l taxes Payroll options when required 26 Foreign Assignees Policies Compensation package Allowances Relocation Travel Health coverage while abroad UC Business Travel Accident 27 9
Employing Local Nationals Hiring Arrangements Direct Hire Host institution support Secondment Agency or other third party Employment Contract vs. Service Provider Many countries apply similar employment classification concepts such as the U.S. control test Contractors who are misclassified can claim an employment relationship Engage local legal counsel or consultant to draft contracts 28 Employing Local Nationals Employment terms and conditions Employment at will is a US concept only Governed by local regulations and possibly collective agreements Employment practice may become entitlement ( acquired rights ) Be aware of local benefits (and total cost of employment) 29 Employing Local Nationals Employment terms and conditions Compensation Benchmark local market Review applicable CBA s CBAs Be aware of issues with transitional arrangements hiring independent contractor that transitions to employee Payroll Engage local accountant or payroll service Ensure checks and balances if small office 30 10
General International Compliance Global Policies Data Privacy Global Code of Conduct 31 32 11